For reasons of historical reference, URLs where articles were located are listed. Many of the source files have disappeared from the ephemeral Web, but the Unknown are keeping tabs on their own media history.

Mark Amerika mentioned us in American Book Review http://www.litline.org/abr/abrND00.html
November-December 2000

We got included in Jumpin' at the Diner at Riding the Meridian, a sort of second-class canon for men. Jay Bolter, as usual, studiously ignores us.
http://califia.hispeed.com/Jumpin/jukeframe2.htm
December 2000

Destination Unknown: Experiments in the Network Novel
Ph.D. Dissertation by Scott Rettberg
http://www.ohiolink.edu/etd/view.cgi?ucin1044275671
The dissertation contains two components: a critical component that examines recent experiments in writing literature specifically for the electronic media, and a creative component that includes selections from The Unknown, the hypertext novel I coauthored with William Gillespie and Dirk Stratton.

"Een zwervende
draad"
M.A. Thesis by Carolien van den Bos
Perhaps the most rigorous Unknown Scholarship produced thus far, working
from a massively rich knowledge base, van den Bos deconstructs some of
the techniques and structural principles of the Unknown, delivers her
arguments within a hypertextual structure and places the Unknown in the
context of literary postmodernism. (in Dutch)

(hyper)Textuality.org
"The entire work swirls around so well that eventually it doesn't matter that the supposed subject never appeared; the real subject is the journey, the self-examination or lack thereof, and the ... aw-hell fun of it. Along the way they discuss hypertext, writing, spoof the publishing industry, parody themselves and what they're doing. It's House of Leaves, but funny instead of frightening."